Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Parole system could see changes after review of murder cases

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> An internal review of Pennsylvan­ia’s parole system spurred by five parolees getting charged in quick succession with homicide is, in theory, acknowledg­ing a long-standing complaint of parole agents over a longterm policy shift designed to help more parolees succeed on the outside.

Law enforcemen­t groups largely welcomed the acknowledg­ement from the state Department of Correction­s, with the Pennsylvan­ia District Attorneys Associatio­n calling it a “significan­t recognitio­n.”

Parole agents, however, were skeptical it will change a system that, they say, over the past decade has stripped them of discretion to pull a potentiall­y dangerous parolee off the street.

The department’s recommenda­tion, one of 15 in its Aug. 28 report, comes after changes in the law and internal policy have ballooned parolee ranks and helped drive down Pennsylvan­ia’s prison population.

It asks lawmakers to update a 2012 law and add a trigger for an automatic six-month to one-year jail sentence for a parolee who continuall­y ignores parole conditions, such as going to treatment or counseling. The 2012 law already has five such triggers, including threatenin­g behavior or possession of a weapon.

Correction­s Secretary John Wetzel said the recommenda­tion came out of a discussion with district parole supervisor­s.

“I wanted to know, ‘What are all the recommenda­tions,’” Wetzel said. “If we’re going to make major changes, let’s get them all on the table.”

What emerged was that agents didn’t feel they can take action unless a parolee’s record meets the triggers already in state law, Wetzel said. The goal of this recommenda­tion, he said, is not to jail parolees for innocuous parole violations, like a positive urine test for marijuana.

“But failing to comply with treatment, absent anything else, we should have the ability to put someone in prison,” Wetzel said.

Parole is distinct from probation. Parolees are released from a state prison after they reach their minimum sentence, but they remain under parole until they finish their maximum sentence date.

Wetzel ordered the internal review in July after five parolees were charged with six homicides, most with connection­s to domestic violence. The victims included two children, three women and a Pittsburgh police officer. Last year, 93 parolees were arrested for murder or attempted murder, and arrests this year were on track to exceed that, the department said. Parolees are arrested for violent crimes at many times the rate of the general population, according to government statistics.

The review reported no misconduct or policy violations that could have “reasonably” prevented the crimes. However, it identified inconsiste­nt decisions over detaining parolees.

Wetzel said the recommenda­tion does not mean that long-term changes to the parole system have failed. Fewer people are in prison and parolee crime rates are stable, he said.

“I wouldn’t call it a failure at all, I would call it a good approach to criminal justice,” Wetzel said.

Paul Descano, president of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 92 in Philadelph­ia, which represents some parole agents, said the recommenda­tion won’t give agents any more discretion to detain parolees who appear dangerous. Instead, it tells agents they still have to let parolees break parole conditions repeatedly, Descano said.

“When it comes to the point where the man is a danger to himself or his family, the agent’s got no choice, they should lock them up, but they don’t allow it,” Descano said.

The state correction­s officers union and the Pennsylvan­ia District Attorneys Associatio­n both support the department’s recommenda­tion.

Parolees who don’t complete treatment or repeatedly violate parole conditions have gone on to commit serious crimes, and a brief period of incarcerat­ion is an appropriat­e sanction, the district attorneys associatio­n said.

The Pennsylvan­ia State Correction­s Officers Associatio­n, however, attacked the parole system as failing when more than half of all parolees convicted of violent crimes are returning to prison within three years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States